Slightly less Random Ramblings

January 27, 2010

Stephan Kinsella is the King of Technology (KOT)

Filed under: Uncategorized — Robert Wicks @ 2:23 pm

Libertarian activist and patent lawyer Stephan Kinsella and I had a bit of a gentleman’s bet. I was a skeptic in the whole Apple tablet (now known as the iPad) thing. He was not. I said if Apple actually put out a tablet for less than $1000, I’d dub him the King of Technology. Well, the day has come, and it is time for me to pay up. Today, January 27, 2010, I hereby dub Stephan Kinsella as King of Technology. Congratulations on your award. I sincerely hope you don’t choke on it.

All in good fun, of course.

January 16, 2010

Sandwich to SAVE THE WORLD!

Filed under: cooking, environment — Robert Wicks @ 4:46 pm

Much of the hubub about global warming/sudden climate change seems to be around people becoming vegans, or at least vegetarians. While I am by no means an environmentalist, I did come up with something which may help appease a bunch of neurotics do my part to save the Earth. Of course, we all love the earth. After all, we live here. Some of us love the earth like we love our grandmothers. Some of us prefer a bit more carnal relationship. In light of this, I will mention a couple of tasty options in addition to the basics.

One of my favorite things to grill are mushrooms. Mushrooms on a charcoal grill add a lot to dishes and work well as a quick snack. Sliced and served cold, they work well in sandwiches, which is what I have here. First, get mushrooms which are big enough to not fall through the grill. I usually go for plain brown mushrooms, but not the full grown portabellas, since the stems have to be discarded or used elsewhere, being too chewy for a sandwich.

You will need:

  • Charcoal grill. I like Weber.
  • 3-4 bell peppers. Pick a color, any color.
  • Mushrooms. I usually cook an entire grill full of them at once.
  • 1 bottle of zesty Italian dressing
  • Sliced provolone cheese (optional)
  • Your favorite deli meat. (optional)
  • Lettuce. Pick the variety you like, but if the variety you like is iceberg, you’re wrong. You might as well shave ice from an iceberg and put it on a sandwich. You’ll get something cold, crunchy, and flavorless either way. I go for Romaine, usually.
  • Roma tomatoes, sliced.

Remove the seeds and stem from the peppers. Use a dry brush to remove the dirt from the mushrooms. In a 1 gallon sealable bag, mix the vegetables with the bottle of dressing. Sit it in the refrigerator overnight. The next day, get read to grill. Put the peppers on direct heat to start out. You want to sear the skin on them so that it is easy to remove. Keep the mushrooms away from direct heat. Cook the whole thing for about 90 minutes. If you have the grill at very low smoking temperature, you can keep them on it for 3-4 hours.

After cooking, scrape the outer membrane from the peppers. Not only will the membrane make biting into the sandwich difficult, it is also where the pesticides are most concentrated. Tree huggers won’t have to worry about that, but the rest of us might as well. Chill the peppers and mushrooms. Once chilled, slice them in the something you can easily fit between two slices of bread.

As for bread, anything works. I like Italian bread, in keeping with the theme. Put some washed lettuce and sliced roma tomatoes on the sandwich. Since the vegetables were well-marinated, there is no need for condiments, but if you would like some freshly cracked black pepper, be my guest. The non-vegans get to have cheese. The non-vegetarians get meat, too.

Enjoy this sandwich, secure in the knowledge that you are contributing your small part to eliminating global cooling global warming sudden climate change.

January 5, 2010

Malaysian Oppression of Muslims

Filed under: Islam, Police — Robert Wicks @ 11:02 am

From http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8439899.stm:

Fifty-two unmarried couples could face charges of sexual misconduct and jail terms after being caught in hotel rooms by Malaysia’s Islamic morality police.

The article goes on to say:

Under Malaysia’s Islamic Sharia Law, couples who are not married to each other should not be in a secluded area or confined space, which could give rise to suspicion that they were engaged in immoral acts.

This is an example of what many in the West would call “the” Sharia. The “the” is problematic. Many Muslims voluntarily submit to rulings by Islamic scholars. However, there have been many scholars of Islamic thought and many schools of thought throughout history. To condense 1400 years of scholarship among billions of people into “the” Sharia is a fool’s errand. There is no “the.” There are various interpretations of Islamic law and competing courts are the best way to insure a just outcome. Monopoly justice always carries an element of injustice. Sometimes the injustices are so large that it is difficult to find the justice in the ruling at all. Even in this case, for example, the prohibition against entering the home of another without first being invited appears to have been ignored.

January 1, 2010

. . . But I Repeat Myself

Filed under: Uncategorized — Robert Wicks @ 8:44 pm

Once again, MSNBC comes through with an incredulous bit on the TSA. Can you spot the threats? Letting even one threat by would get a fully trained screener fired.” Then why are there any TSA screeners left?

December 30, 2009

MSNBC as Government Shills (as usual)

Filed under: security — Robert Wicks @ 8:09 am

I was listening to an MSNBC podcast and the reporter said:

“As much as airline security has been tightened since 9/11, this attempt to bomb a plane bound for the US demonstrates this: that determined terrorists are constantly looking for gaps to exploit.”

Clearly, this is ridiculous. This incident has shown us many things, but that is not one of them. Among the things it shows us:

1) The government is as incompetent at performing basic security as it is at providing anything else of value.

2) In light of 1), Al Qaeda and its allies are not terribly interested in launching attacks on US soil. It would not, apparently be terribly difficult to do so if they actually had much desire.

3) Considering the attacks seen overseas, Islamic militants are mostly interested in attacking soldiers in Muslim areas and civilians who are living in occupied areas.

4) It is difficult to get someone who is both competent and smart to sign up for a suicide bombing mission.

December 18, 2009

Odd Secunia PSI Result

Filed under: security, software, Windows — Robert Wicks @ 9:49 am

I did a Secunia PSI scan on my Windows 7 laptop. It found no insecure programs, but gave this strange result:
image
Security Threats:
0
Secunia System Score: [?]
100%
Secunia PSI WorldMap:
Your Secunia System Score of 100% is 5% HIGHER than the average user from Georgia, United States.
Compared to users WITHOUT the Secunia PSI installed, your Secunia System Score is 85% WORSE – install patches now!
Last Full System Scan: [?]
3 minutes ago
How could a 100% rating be 85% worse than anything? What an odd bug. Still, I highly recommend the tool for those interested in keeping a Windows PC up to date.

December 5, 2009

Running Windows 7 as a Truecrypt Hidden Operating System

Filed under: encryption, Truecrypt, Windows — Robert Wicks @ 5:03 pm

My favorite whole drive encryption system, hands down, is Truecrypt. One of the interesting features is the notion of plausible deniability. One of the ways this deniability may be accomplished in through a hidden operating system. I don’t really need the deniability features, but I have found that the hidden operating system is useful in allowing me to keep Windows XP on my laptop, but being able to seamlessly boot into Windows 7 (I have also set up Windows 2008 Server in the same way).

I have a 160GB hard drive, which I divided into a 40 GB partition and another 120 GB partition. I have XP installed on the 40GB partition, which is my C: drive. I have another D: drive where I keep data. That’s the 120GB partition. It is important to have a similarly partitioned hard drive. It is also vital that the 120GB partition have enough space to hold all of C:, i.e., 40GB. Do a full sector level backup on the drive. I use Knoppix, then use the dd command to copy the entire /dev/sda drive to a file on a USB hard drive. You should be able to access the individual files on D:. Use ntbackup to run a backup from within Windows XP on the D: drive. Once you have all this done, you can install Windows 7 from scratch, reformatting all the partitions, but only installing on the 40GB one. Leave the 120GB partition empty.

After installing Windows 7, run Truecrypt, pull down on the system menu and select “Create Hidden Operating System . . .” Follow the prompts to create it as normal. After you delete the original partition (the last step in Truecrypt’s hidden OS creation sequence), you should then restore the boot sectors and the first partition from your backup. If you used dd, this just means booting into Knoppix and running something like:

dd if=/path/to/backup/file of=/dev/sda bs=512 count=<number of the last sector of the /dev/sda1 partition, which you can determine by running fdisk –l –u /dev/sda>

This will write over the hard drive up to the point where our outer volume which holds the hidden partition starts. When you reboot, you will boot back into your old Windows XP. It will probably freak out about not being able to get to D. Just install Truecrypt, then mount the outer volume using the outer volume password. You can then restore your backup into that volume.

Finally, encrypt the XP system. This will install the Truecrypt boot loader, where you will be able to provide either the XP decryption password or the Windows 7 decryption password in order to choose which operating system you wish to run.

This allows me to run two versions of Windows with no fear whatsoever that they will interfere with one another. Also, it gets me into the habit of performing disaster recovery backups on my laptop.

November 18, 2009

Cory Maye Granted New Trial

Filed under: Uncategorized — Robert Wicks @ 7:00 pm

Radley Balko has been calling attention to this horrible crime against an innocent man by my home state of Mississippi. Finally, Maye has been granted a new trial.

November 17, 2009

Lawyers Write Law, And Then Are The Only Ones To Make Millions

Filed under: Uncategorized — Robert Wicks @ 6:17 pm

Of course, I am sure this was merely a by-product of sincere efforts to assist the poor and oppressed.

 
 

Sent to you by Robert A. Wicks via Google Reader:

 
 

via Techdirt by Mike Masnick on 11/17/09


It’s difficult not to become even more cynical when you read stories like the following one. Sent in by Eric Goldman, it’s about a state law in California that was mainly written by two lawyers: Joaquin Avila, a law professor from Seattle, and Robert Rubin, the “legal director” for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area. So, here’s the interesting thing: since this state law has been put in place (seven years ago), the only lawsuits have been brought by Rubin’s committee or Avila and they’ve made themselves over $4 million with a few more lawsuits pending and a bunch more threatened (again, all from either Avila or Rubin’s committee).

What a great deal: write a law, and then be the only lawyers to use the law to make millions.

As for the law itself, it was a law that apparently very few people were asking for — requiring that state courts carve out specific districts that favor minority groups, so they are not excluded from local elections. Here’s how the AP describes it:

The California statute targets commonly used “at-large” elections — those in which candidates run citywide or across an entire school district. Avila said that method can result in discrimination because whatever group constitutes the majority of voters can dominate the ballot box and block minorities from winning representation. As a remedy, the law empowers state courts to create smaller election districts favoring minority candidates.

Officials in several California communities said they never heard complaints of voter discrimination until the lawyers stepped forward. In one case, the Tulare Local Healthcare District, now known as Tulare Regional Medical Center, was sued even though its five-member governing board is a rainbow of diversity — two emigres from India, a Hispanic, a black and a white. The lawsuit argues Hispanics, who make up about a third of local voters, have been shortchanged.

Of course, there are many reasons why the exact makeup of a governing board might not match the exact percentage of the population (including the simple fact that most people vote on issues, not the ethnicity of the people they’re voting for). But, even if there was a problem it seems highly questionable that the two lawyers who wrote the bill are now profiting tremendously from it and appear to be the only ones who do so.

It’s stories like this one that make us so nervous about so much legislation. This is the type of law they create: it maysound good (who’s going to argue against diversity?). But, the actual law appears to have been nothing more than a way for these lawyers to go around collecting millions, while disrupting communities and schoolboards, and sending their taxpayer money to these lawyers.

Permalink | Comments | Email This Story


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

November 2, 2009

David E. Davis, Jr. on Cash for Clunkers

Filed under: cars, statism, welfare — Robert Wicks @ 6:43 am

In the December 2009 issue of Car and Driver (article not available online), David E. Davis, Jr. lambasts the wildly popular “cash for clunkers” program:

Not until the government got involved was anyone stupid enough to pour sodium silicate into the engines of the trade-ins on used-car lots and render them useless except as junk to be sold by the pound.

A fleet of American used cars like, say, 1977 Chevrolet Caprices could be shipped to any country in the Third and Fourth Worlds and would revolutionize the way people live. Women with sick children would not be hitchhiking 50 miles to clinics.

Of course, the environment is far more important than a few million poor foreigners. The government bureaucrats, in their seemingly never ending quest to absolutely perfect their abilities to do evil, work tirelessly to minimize any actually good secondary effects from their actions.

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